Location type
Station
Name and dates
Fraserburgh (1865-1965)
Opened on the
Formartine and Buchan Railway.
Opened on the
St Combs Light Railway (Great North of Scotland Railway).
Description
This terminus was in the east of Fraserburgh close to the quaysides of the harbour.
Original station
The original station was smaller. It had a trainshed (similar to that at
Thurso) covering a platform on the west side of a loop.
On the west side, a little south of the trainshed, was the two road
Fraserburgh Shed.
On the east side, projecting north of the station building was the northern end of the goods yard: the goods shed to the west and loading bank to the east.
Fraserburgh Harbour was on the east side and a little to the north. Lines approached the station from the south.
The goods yard was rebuilt and expanded. A signal box opened in 1894 on the west side of the station 'throat'.
Reconstruction
The passenger station was rebuilt in 1903-04, the new station being considerably larger with longer platforms and a larger station building. The new building was in granite and a new glazed trainshed was located behind it covering the platform ends and circulating area. This was a three platform station. Canopies extended south from the trainshed over the platforms.
Much of the enlargement was due to the opening of the
St Combs Light Railway (Great North of Scotland Railway) in 1903. This branch ran parallel with the 'main line' for around half a mile south of the signal box.
Fraserburgh Shed was retained and the goods yard altered a little but remained largely the same as the earlier enlargement. A very long headshunt for the goods yard was added, running down the east side of the passenger lines and extending as far south as the Kessock Road bridge.The new Faithlie Harbour was built to the east of the station goods yard.
The signal box was replaced in 1904, the replacement being on the east side south of the Links Road overbridge.
The
Consolidated Pneumatic Tool Works opened to the south of the station, on the west side, in 1904. It was approached via a headshunt which was accessed from the north, a pair of sidings running north west into the works.
In 1912 the
Great North of Scotland Railway took over an existing connecting bus service from the station to Rosehearty and New Aberdour, an alternative to building a light railway.
Run down and closure
The station's roof was cut back in 1955.
The
St Combs line and main line both closed to passengers in 1965.
The signal box closed in 1966. The platform lines were lifted, although their approach to the south was retained for its loop. The goods yard remained relatively intact. A loading bank in the yard could be pressed into service as a platform when tours visited Fraserburgh.
The line closed in 1979.
The station building, canopies and platforms were removed in the 1980s (South Harbour Road was built along the former trackbed in 1987). It is perhaps apt that the station building site is now occupied by a Job Centre.
Much of the goods yard remained empty with industrial units steadily opening over its remains. A portion remains clear as a lorry park.
The locomotive shed has survived, the oldest part of the station site (after the 1904 rebuilding). This shed still stands on the west side of South Harbour Road, within the yard of Iceberg Ltd.
Local
The Museum of Scottish Lighthouses is in the north of the town.
Tags
Station terminus Aliases
The Broch
External links
Canmore site record NLS Collection OS map of 1892-1914 NLS Collection OS map of 1944-67
12/12/2021